by rpavich » Wed Aug 19, 2020 4:14 pm
by BaNZ » Wed Aug 19, 2020 4:55 pm
by goatts » Wed Aug 19, 2020 6:41 pm
by rpavich » Wed Aug 19, 2020 6:44 pm
by krustyburger » Wed Aug 19, 2020 8:40 pm
by waikikikichan » Wed Aug 19, 2020 9:00 pm
rpavich wrote:If you pop up and the wave passes you by then you were too soon, if you pearl, you are too late. You pop up in between those 2 feelings. Practice, paddle harder, arch your back, pop up. Eventually you will get it.
by oldmansurfer » Wed Aug 19, 2020 10:06 pm
by rpavich » Wed Aug 19, 2020 10:13 pm
krustyburger wrote:As an exercise, try to catch a wave and ride it in cobra pose (head and top half of body in push-up position with arms extended) all the way to the end of the line instead of trying to stand up.
You will clearly feel the point at which the wave begins to carry you and where you no longer need to paddle. Get into cobra pose then. Once in cobra pose engage a rail and head down the line without worrying about your pop-up. Unless it's a very soft spilling wave, the wave will get steeper and more hollow. Depending on the wave, there may be multiple seconds of time at which you can cruise in cobra, have a look around, and then pop-up. Keep in mind that it will be steeper and harder the longer you wait. This should help you get a "feeling" of how the wave breaks and enjoy a nice cruise down the line without the pressure of having to stand up.
by dtc » Thu Aug 20, 2020 3:33 am
waikikikichan wrote:2) Paddle Harder - "Grip it and Rip it", huh ? No, No. You need to paddle SMARTER not Harder. Power, Position and Timing. Of the three, Position and Timing are most important.
No where in that list do I see the recommendation to LOOK. Where you look is where you go.
by rpavich » Thu Aug 20, 2020 11:27 am
waikikikichan wrote:rpavich wrote:If you pop up and the wave passes you by then you were too soon, if you pearl, you are too late. You pop up in between those 2 feelings. Practice, paddle harder, arch your back, pop up. Eventually you will get it.
Technically I agree with that longboard forum post. BUT.........:
1) Practice - practice what ? practice a bad technique only makes you worse.
2) Paddle Harder - "Grip it and Rip it", huh ? No, No. You need to paddle SMARTER not Harder. Power, Position and Timing. Of the three, Position and Timing are most important.
3) Arch your back - at the right moment, maybe. But how do you know when that moment is ? I keep my chest down on the deck so that i can get my elbow deep into the water to get a fuller more powerful stroke.
4) Pop up - yeah, but again when ? Are you Popping up to both feet or one knee ? Chicken wing or crawl up ?
by rpavich » Thu Aug 20, 2020 11:29 am
dtc wrote:waikikikichan wrote:2) Paddle Harder - "Grip it and Rip it", huh ? No, No. You need to paddle SMARTER not Harder. Power, Position and Timing. Of the three, Position and Timing are most important.
No where in that list do I see the recommendation to LOOK. Where you look is where you go.
This is how I like to think of it. You catch a wave using gravity, not the wave speed (the wave does push your board, but you catch the wave via gravity). You catch it by getting to the slope of the wave and sliding down the face (just like skiing or skateboarding down a hill). So that is position. You need to be in a position to slide down the face. As waikikichan says - position.
But the face is moving all the time and is changing all the time. So you need to hit the right spot at the right time. If you get to the face of the wave too early, its not steep enough and you cant slide down it. Get there too late and it will be too steep/the lip will crash on top of you. So timing is needed
So how do you get to the right spot at the right time? If you know waves, you can be in that spot from the start (no paddle take offs). But for most of us, we use paddling. If you are paddling too slowly, then the wave either goes underneath you (you miss it) or you are almost there but the wave picks up your tail and you nose dive.
Also, if you get to the right spot but pop up too early - the wave will pass underneath. If you pop up too late, you may perl (or may just belly ride down the face). But you still need to be in the right spot at the right time - and then get the pop up right as well
Arching your back is about weighting the rear of the board so that its not pushed up by the wave. This insta has an interesting shot toward the end showing how the weighting changes how the wave pushes on the board
https://www.instagram.com/p/CDwyiTDIUSb ... hare_sheet
by LostAtSea » Mon Aug 24, 2020 9:05 pm
waikikikichan wrote:No where in that list do I see the recommendation to LOOK. Where you look is where you go.
by IB_Surfer » Fri Aug 28, 2020 3:37 am
by SandInMyPants » Sat Aug 29, 2020 1:01 pm
by waikikikichan » Sat Aug 29, 2020 9:33 pm
SandInMyPants wrote:If you are popping up too late, try to turn the board a bit to the side the wave breaks, that might do it.
by oldmansurfer » Sun Aug 30, 2020 3:23 am
by SandInMyPants » Sun Aug 30, 2020 5:39 am
waikikikichan wrote:SandInMyPants wrote:If you are popping up too late, try to turn the board a bit to the side the wave breaks, that might do it.
Could you explain more in detail. Do you mean he should "Angle In" during the take off ?
by waikikikichan » Sun Aug 30, 2020 7:35 am
SandInMyPants wrote:[Jep, Angle/Point the nose a bit to the side when popping up.
SandInMyPants wrote:See clip from 8.30
SandInMyPants wrote:If your chest and front-body points away from the wave-wall when popping up, you can grap the edge (rail) of the board on the side which is away from the wave. That can help prevent the nose to go under, and it will help you to keep your body in a low balance-point so you have more control.
by SandInMyPants » Sun Aug 30, 2020 1:19 pm
waikikikichan wrote:SandInMyPants wrote:[Jep, Angle/Point the nose a bit to the side when popping up.
BUT, the OP is already LATE popping up, trying to turn while still trying to get firmly planted ( and maybe the nose pointed up ), will probably have him stuck high up in the lip. If he was pointed down, gravity and momentum ( with the fins point in the direction ) will assist. Trying to turn without being in control and having the side of the fins now catching the energy of the water rushing up the face, will just throw him (now sideways ) over with the lip.SandInMyPants wrote:See clip from 8.30
Oh, that guy ......... he normally doesn't deal with long board problems, but he can get you " Surfing Like a Pro in 25 Minutes ".SandInMyPants wrote:If your chest and front-body points away from the wave-wall when popping up, you can grap the edge (rail) of the board on the side which is away from the wave. That can help prevent the nose to go under, and it will help you to keep your body in a low balance-point so you have more control.
"Grabbing Rail" is a more advanced technique. I wouldn't recommend it for beginners to use. Why ? Like as you said "keep your body in a low balance-point", ( which sometimes is good ) but ends up creating the bad habit of squatting and the dreaded "stink bug" stance. Better to have the legs soft and extended, used to absorb the whitewater like shock absorbers versus compressed and locked out.
by oldmansurfer » Sun Aug 30, 2020 7:44 pm
2 hours ago by JamesHsouthaus6 comments
3 days ago by Kulharin3 comments
13 days ago by Swimmy Tim5 comments
14 days ago by BaNZ3 comments
19 days ago by BoMan6 comments
22 days ago by hannaconner5 comments
1 month ago by BaNZ4 comments
1 month ago by HaoleKook4 comments